But the 31-year-old Scarborough, Ontario, native and his team of lawyers stuck to professing his innocence throughout a month-long preliminary hearing in March and April. Magnotta’s lawyers — one of whom excused himself during the proceedings — heard a bevy of evidence against their client, including some video evidence, as their client watched from a large Plexiglas prisoner’s box.

A Quebec court indicted Magnotta on charges of first-degree murder, offering indignities to a human body, broadcasting obscene materials, using the post office to distribute obscene materials, and harassment of the prime minister and other members of Parliament.

His principle defence counsel, Toronto lawyer Luc Leclair, had attempted to get the court to accept a lesser charge of second-degree murder, to no avail. He told the court that the evidence presented was circumstantial and failed to show planning and deliberate intent. The judge felt otherwise and ordered Magnotta to stand trial on all the charges in September 2014.

The full trial, between public interest and wall-to-wall media coverage, promises to be a circus. During his preliminary hearing — the entirety of which is covered under a publication ban and cannot be made public until a jury is sequestered during the main trial — several self-identified supporters travelled to the Montreal courthouse to express their support for the accused murderer.

While Magnotta remained largely blank-faced during the proceedings last spring, he did lose consciousness briefly while watching video evidence presented by the Montreal police during one highly publicized day in March.

While it’s unclear whether the family of victim Lin Jun will travel to Quebec for the proceedings in September, Jun’s father was present for several days of the hearings in the spring, accompanied by his lawyer.